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Fishers
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Working and occasional papers presented through the Center for Local and Regional Development, Klaksvik

File includes Marian Binkley, "From Fishing Centre to Tourist Destination: The Restructuring of Lunenburg, Nova Scotia" and "Safety Awareness in the Nova Scotia Deep-sea Fishery"; Gene Barrett, "Social Capital, Community, and the Dialects of Globalization": Gene Barrett and S. Mauricio I. Canigga, "There are More Vets than Doctors in Chiloe: Social and Community Impact of Globalization of Aquaculture"; and Unnur Dis Skaptadottir, "Coping with a Changing Economy in Northern Localities: An Icelandic Case Study." There are also five papers in Norwegian, Faroese or Danish.

Individual quotas (IQ) group meetings, minutes and notes

File also includes a Fisheries and Oceans Conservation and Protection bulletin; approved conservation harvesting plans for 1994; a report by Jean Guy D'Entremont, President of Inshore Fisheries Ltd., on the crisis facing the STQ fleet in Scotia Fundy; and newspaper clippings.

Individual quotas (IQ) group meetings, minutes and notes

File contains meeting notes and minutes for IQ groups; newspaper clippings; correspondence and reports about Georges Bank groundfish stocks; notes about an interview with Peter Noseworthy, Atlantic Catch Data; news releases; and operation guidelines for the Scotia Fundy region ITQ mobile gear groundfish vessels under 65 feet.

Racing fishermen / Andrew Merkel : [manuscript]

File contains a 1000 word article by Andrew Merkel about the history of schooner racing in Nova Scotia prior to the Bluenose, as well as a letter from Merkel to C.B. Cochrane, editor of King's College Record, offering the article for publication.

Photograph of a man looking at a hole in the keel of a salvaged boat, sitting on a beach at Seal Island with a small crowd of people amassed to observe

Item is a photograph of a salvaged boat. The hole in its keel was sustained by striking a piece of steel. An American ship went aground between Seal Island and Blonde Rock during World War II, and steel cargo was thrown overboard in an effort to lighten the vessel for subsequent salvage operations. The ejected steel remains a menace to fishing boats in those waters, where the tide rises and falls with a large margin.

Photograph of a man watching the salmon run from the side of a deck

Item, a photograph, is related to MS-2-202, Box 54, Folder 37, Items 1-2 in subseries Thomas Head Raddall's loose photographs. The man in the photograph may be Raddall. There is a message from David Archibald to Raddall reminiscing their trip together to Serpentine River in Newfoundland on the reverse side.
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